CO U R I ER Pasadena City College
Serving PCC Since 1915
FEBRUARY 25, 2016 VOLUME 113 ISSUE 03
ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT PCCCOURIER.COM
Football players suffer biggest defeat yet Ahmad Akkaoui and Christian Rivas Staff Writers
Despite pleas from PCC football players to retain their coach during the Board of Trustees meeting yesterday, the board unanimously decided to name Fullerton quarterbacks coach Tom Maher the new head coach of the Lancers football team. Members of the team gathered in the Creveling Lounge to show support for their now former coach Thom Kaumeyer. Maher would be the Lancers’ third coach in two years, marking yet another questionable offseason. Speaking on behalf of the team was freshman linebacker Daniel Wire. “I believe this is a very unfair and unprofessional move,” said Wire. “They opened the job on the Pasadena website for a new head coach … but then after Tom Maher applied,
Katja Liebing/Courier The football team reacting to the board approving the hiring of the new head coach at the Board of Trustees meeting on Wednesday.
Seeing a better future for visually impaired students on campus
Ahmad Akkaoui Staff Writer
Brian Chernick Staff Writer
Irma Carrillo/Courier Lancers’ starting point guard Judith Espinoza flashing a big smile after Wednesday night’s win against Rio Hondo College with a final score 65-54 in the Hutto Patterson Gym. in the third quarter,” Espinoza said. “We were just focused and today we really pumped each other up and the coaches helped too. We just knew that we couldn’t let them come back in the third quarter because this is a really important game. Everyone gave it their all and we did what had to be done.” The Lancers got into foul trouble early in the second half and had the Roadrunners at the free throw line. Unfazed by the comeback attempt, they kept their foot on the gas by playing detailed on the offense and defense. The Lancers were able to close out on the shooters and kept Rio
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Katja Liebing/Courier The footbal team arguing against the removal of their football coach, Thom Kaumeyer, at the Board of Trustees meeting on Wednesday.
Women’s basketball advances
The women’s basketball team got over the hump that was Rio Hondo’s late-game push and defeated the Roadrunners, 65-54, in coach Joe Peron’s 50th playoff win to move on to the next round of the SoCal Regional playoffs. Coming into the game, Pasadena knew Rio Hondo shoots the ball at a high level from behind the arc, averaging 31 percent, and were able to limit them to seven made three-pointers in 30 attempts. Pasadena did much better in the third quarter of the game, scoring 18 points, compared to last game when they only scored two points. Point guard Judith Espinoza finished with 17 points and nine assists. She averaged just below five turnovers a game during the regular season but had zero turnovers this game. “During halftime, he was just saying we knew coming into today that we had to come out really hard
they closed the applications.” Superintendent/President Dr. Rajen Vurdien explained the legality of this procedure when it was called into question. “Once there is an internal candidate, that is interested in the position, then no outsiders, according to the faculty contract we had, no temporary person or outsiders are considered for the position,” said Vurdien. Players also said during public comment that Kaumeyer applied for coaching position but wasn’t given fair consideration. According to Vurdien, Kaumeyer was notified that after his one-year, temporary contract, he would be unable to re-apply for the head coaching position. “We do not keep temporary coaches for more than one year. That was made very clear,” Vurdien said. Wire’s teammate Joey Gregory went to the podium to express his concerns on the hiring
Hondo from making easy baskets. Forward Ilianna Blanc sat out the first half last game with two early fouls and wasn’t able to establish a presence. Blanc dominated in the paint and finished with 17 points on 7 for 11 shooting paired with 5 steals and 3 blocks. “I think we took that to a big advantage to get it to the post because we had game film on them and we knew they didn’t have a big presence so we knew that we needed to work the inside out,” Blanc said. “We knew they are a shooting team so our first goal was to not let
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Students have been putting up with antiquated and inaccurate braille signs throughout the older buildings on campus for years and now campus clubs and the administration are finally coming together to build a stronger, more accessible campus for current and incoming disabled students. The level of inaccessibility throughout parts of the campus became apparent for Students Unlimited president Roger Martinez after his friend and Access Technology president Philbert Tjong, who is blind, asked Martinez where the C Building bathroom was located. Martinez realized then that Tjong had been making an extended trek over to other buildings just to use the bathroom. Tjong has been working on a computer science degree and because of the complexity in some of the math classes he would forgo a
bathroom break altogether to avoid missing any bit of the lecture. When Martinez examined the bathroom braille sign he was shocked to find that not only had the braille sign lacked a gender specification, but the sign had only the room number printed on it. “Wouldn’t you want to fix that?” Martinez asked. Now the Students Unlimited and Access Technology clubs have set out to do right for their fellow students by working with the administration to make the campus more accessible than ever before. Tjong is not the only student affected. Jane Suh and Joseph Duncan, also members of Students Unlimited, have experienced the lack of accessibly and consistency in the signage throughout the building. “There are signs everywhere,” Suh said. “But I don’t know which side the door is on.” Suh and Duncan pointed out that
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